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MOSCOW, May 1 (RIA Novosti) - About 400,000...

MOSCOW, May 1 (RIA Novosti) - About 400,000 Russians on Friday celebrated Spring and Labor Day, with trade unions and political parties holding rallies across the country. "As of 15:00 Moscow time [11:00 GMT], 491 demonstrations, rallies and assemblies took place in Russia, with about 400,000 people participating," police said, adding that 32,000 police and Interior Ministry troops worked to ensure public order during the events across Russia. May 1 is Spring and Labor Day across Russia, a national holiday. In Soviet times May 1 saw massive Communist Party rallies. Moscow police reported earlier in the day that as around 25,000 people were taking part in events in downtown Moscow to mark the day, including demonstrations by the ruling United Russia party, the Communists and trade unions, the ultranationalist LDPR Party and the liberal Yabloko party. No public order problems were reported in Moscow, but police have detained 120 nationalists, anti-fascists and anarchists following demonstrations in St. Petersburg. Police seized a number of knives and rubber-bullets pistols.


Muscovites will be able to learn about Soviet...

Muscovites will be able to learn about Soviet leader Joseph Stalin"s role in the World War II victory from street stands, a source in the Russian capital"s advertising and design committee said Wednesday.


MOSCOW, April 1 (RIA Novosti) - The Paris-based...

MOSCOW, April 1 (RIA Novosti) - The Paris-based international organization Reporters Without Borders strongly criticized on Wednesday the death of a journalist and the beating of a prominent human rights activist in Moscow. Sergei Protazanov, a reporter for the Grazhdanskoye Soglasie newspaper, based in the north Moscow suburb of Khimki, died in hospital on Monday, two days after he was beaten near his home. Police on Wednesday denied the reports of an attack on the journalist, saying his death occurred because of intoxication. They said Protazanov was found drunk near his home and hospitalized but released on Sunday. A medical expert said he died as a result of poisoning by an unknown substance. Lev Ponomaryov, leader of the For Human Rights movement and a member of the newly formed Solidarity opposition party, was attacked outside his east Moscow home on Tuesday. "Ponomaryov, executive director of Russia"s For Human Rights movement, was cruelly beaten by three unknown people at about 11:00 p.m. Moscow time [19:00 GMT]," the official"s colleagues said. Reporters Without Borders said on its website: "There seems to be no end to the appalling series of attacks on journalists, especially local journalists, and human rights activists. The authorities need to actively intervene instead of just issuing statements." "Journalists and human rights activists must not only enjoy the same right to safety as other citizens but should receive special protection because of the particularly useful nature of their contribution to Russian society," the organization said. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Russia has been one of the most dangerous countries for reporters. The most high-profile slaying was the 2006 death of Russian investigative journalist Anna Politkovskaya. In January, Novaya Gazeta journalist Anastasia Baburova was shot dead alongside lawyer Stanislav Markelov in downtown Moscow. Mikhail Beketov, editor-in-chief of the Khimki Pravda local newspaper, who fought a campaign to protect a forest near Moscow from destruction by developers, spent several weeks in coma after being badly beaten near his home in November.

Feature

Joseph Stalin"s grandson has called on Ukraine...

was quoted as saying by the paper.

In December 2009, a Moscow court for a second time rejected a libel suit against a Russian newspaper. Dzhugashvili demanded Novaya Gazeta retract parts of an article calling Stalin a "criminal" and asked for 10 million rubles ($326,000) in compensation for damage to his honor.

He also brought a suit against Ekho Moskvy radio seeking compensation for "offensive disrespect for the late Soviet leader."

Millions of people were executed on fake charges of espionage, sabotage, anti-Soviet propaganda or died of starvation, disease or exposure in Gulag labor camps under Stalin"s rule. According to official statistics, 52 million were convicted on political charges during Stalin"s regime and 6 million were sent out of cities without any court verdict.

A Ukrainian court said last week it had dropped criminal proceedings on the charges of Holodomor, which the country"s authorities said killed more than 3.9 million people,

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